Nikanon
Member
Anyone have any recommendations on books that give directions or formulae for C-41 developer chemicals?
What is BJP and do you know the exact date of such journal?A 1980's BJP Annual has all the formulae for Colour & B&W, C41, RA-4, E6 etc
Ian
Thanks.British Journal of Photography
Thanks.
Anyone knows the name of the article or when it was published or by whom? Anything?
Thank you.
Yes, Wayne, I know, but any clues as to the name of the article or the year (or actual date) or anything? Entering keywords like "colour," "C-41," "recipe" or any combination of those words will yield lots of (and sometimes "no") hits.You may have to go to an electronic database that archives BJP. Your local library or university may give you access to such a database.
Okay. So, is this the 1980 annual or one of the annuals from the 1980s?There's not an article, the BJP Annuals have a Processing section with all the Formulae and instruction in, they cut that section sometime in the late 1990s.
Ian
Thank you.Any of the Annuals from about 1980 onwards, go for a late 80's one though because the 1980 one doesn't have E6 (1981 does).
Ian
I have the BJP annuals from the 1930s up to the final one from 1994 in a bookcase in front of me. The last one that contained the full formula section on was 1985 and it has brews for C41, C22 and Agfa CNS. I don't think the BJP ever published RA4 substitutes as mentioned elsewhere but they did do an earlier one for Ektacolor 74 paper. If you can't find what you're looking for send me a PM and I'll email you scans of the relevant pages. Sorry but I can't post them here. Cheers.Thank you.
Thanks.
Anyone knows the name of the article or when it was published or by whom? Anything?
Thank you.
Thanks for that patent reference. I haven't tried that but it seems a bit low in CD4 and carbonate. Maybe Kodak is trying to throw people off.A real C-41 developer uses both Bromide and Iodide as restrainers. The Iodide will affect the top most layer, whereas the Bromide will affect all three layers, so the combo gives you the option to fine tune the characteristic curves with respect to each other.
I would therefore recommend a close look at this Kodak patent, which lists an accurate C-41 formula, as well as (there was a url link here which no longer exists) based on this formula.
Understood. I believe I did it right and came up with 4.4 g/l which is even lower than the other formulas. It seems we had to go up on CD-4 to make things work - above 5.0 even (Dignan) although I used the same bromide/iodide levels as the patent and used the Dignan carbonate/sulfite levels and a bit higher pH.Remember that this patent is in M/L and CD4 is the bis PPD salt of sulfuric acid!
PE
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